Three Smart Beta Exchange-Traded Funds to Beat the S&P 500

Back in 2012, smart beta investment products stood at the cutting edge of investment innovation.

Fast-forward five years and smart beta exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are among the most popular products in the investment world. Their growth has been impressive.

ETFdb.com tracks over 500 smart beta strategies in the United States alone and has found that more than one-third of pension funds are managing upward of $250 million invested in smart beta strategies. A full 97% of financial advisers plan to maintain or increase exposure to smart beta strategies in 2017.

The smart beta revolution has joined the mainstream.

What is Smart Beta Investing?

As popular as smart beta products are, you may find it hard to get your head around the meaning of “smart beta.”

So let’s start with something familiar: an index fund.

An index fund simply “buys the market” as defined by a mainstream index, such as the S&P 500.

The rationale for index funds is clear.

As Vanguard founder John Bogle has pointed out for decades, active money managers cannot outperform the stock market over the long term. Both high fees and lack of investment skill eat into any market-beating returns.

The verdict on active managers is clear.

In a recent study, S&P Dow Jones found that 99% of actively managed U.S. funds failed to beat the S&P 500 since 2006. A further 98% of global funds underperformed the S&P Global 1200 Index since 2006. And 97% of emerging markets funds underperformed their benchmark index over the past decade.

“Smart beta” strategies offer an ingenious solution to this conundrum.

Smart beta strategies give investors the chance to outperform the mainstream market indexes while still retaining the benefits of traditional indexation.

That just means that the bigger the company, the bigger the holding in the index.

As it turns out, there are other ways to skin the index fund cat.

You can construct indexes in many different ways. You can rank stocks by revenues, by volatility or just choose to weight stocks equally.

Instead of calling these indexes “smart beta” ones, I would call them “Alternative Indexes.”

“Alternative” is any index that is not market-cap weighted.

“Index” confirms that this is still passive index investing, and not “active” or “discretionary” investing.

Three Leading ‘Smart Beta’ Strategies

The advent of smart beta strategies has unleashed an explosion of financial innovation as analysts translate different strategies into different indexes. Some of these strategies work better than others.

To start, I recommend you stick with the most basic “smart beta” strategies: those that invest in stocks included in the S&P 500.

1. ‘Smart Beta’ Strategy #1 — S&P 500 Equal Weight Index

A traditional S&P 500 Index Fund, such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), weights stocks according to market capitalization. This means that the more valuable a stock is, the bigger its weight in the index.

In SPY’s case, the top 10 holdings currently account for 18.52% of the portfolio and include mega-cap stocks like Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon.com (AMZN).

According to S&P Research, the Dividend Aristocrats generated an annualized return of 9.7% over the past 10 years. That easily tops the S&P 500’s return of 6.3%. The chart below shows their performance between 1990 and 2014.

S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF Total Return vs. the S&P 500.

The Dividend Aristocrat Index’s annualized returns are also much steadier than the overall S&P 500. Most notably, in 2008, the Dividend Aristocrats dropped 22%, while the S&P 500 collapsed 37%.

So, investing in Dividend Aristocrats both boosts your returns and historically has offered better downside protection. That’s just about the closest thing you can get to a ‘Holy Grail’ of investing.

You can invest in Dividend Aristocrats through the ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL). It is rated five stars by Morningstar.

For income-oriented investors, the fund’s 2.02% yield beats the S&P 500 Index’s yield of 1.92%. It has an expense ratio of 0.35%.

III. ‘Smart Beta’ Strategy #3 — Dividend Dogs

The “Dividend Dogs” strategy is a close cousin of the “Dogs of the Dow” theory, popularized by Michael O’Higgins in his book, “Beating the Dow.”

Despite a flat market, currently, 15 out 20 positions are profitable. For more information on how I track top investment strategies to generate “best of breed” investment ideas, you can follow this link.

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